Norway repeals blasphemy law in symbolic snub to Charlie Hebdo attack

Norway has repealed a dormant law that made blasphemy a criminal offense. The move was in response to the massacre at the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo by radical Islamists, but has a symbolic significance only.

The proposal to rush
through the change was made February by Conservative MP Anders B.
Werp and Progress Party MP Jan Arild Ellingsen, The Local
reported. The legislators argued that keeping an anti-blasphemy
law in the country's penal code was sending the wrong
message.

“This is a very unfortunate signal to send, and it is time
that society clearly stands up for freedom of speech,” the
two wrote in their proposal.

Opposing the move was Finn Jarle Sæle, editor of the Norwegian
Christian weekly, Norge IDAG, who said it was a “cultural
suicide.”

Things I didn't know: till today, blasphemy was illegal in
Norway. Now you can blaspheme all you want. Didn't say which
religion, of course.

The anti-blasphemy clause is part of Norway's 1902 penal code. A
comprehensive amendment to it was passed in 2005, but has not
come into force due to technicalities and may be postponed till
as late as 2021.

In 2009, the Norwegian government considered giving special
protection to religious values, but the proposal was defeated in
the parliament, which ended voting for repealing the blasphemy
law.

The last person to actually stand trial for blasphemy in Norway
was famous writer Arnulf Overland, who was charged in 1933 for
giving a lecture titled "Christianity, the tenth plague" to the
Norwegian Students' Society. He was acquitted.

The last person found guilty was journalist Arnfred Olsen was
taken to court in 1912 for an article criticizing Christianity in
the radical magazine Freethinkers.